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  1. Biography. William Sitting Bull was a natural son of Sitting Bull, his mother was Four-Robes-Woman. He was born c. 1878 in what is today southern Manitoba, Canada, or in northeastern Montana in the United States. His native name was Runs-Away-From-Him (Lakota: Nakicipa). He was a twin; his brother was Left-Arrow-In-Him who died in childhood. [1]

    • Nancy Sitting Bull (1903-1959), Rosa Sitting Bull (1906-1907)
    • 8 December 1909 (aged 31), Wanblee, South Dakota, US
    • Scout Woman (died 1931)
  2. May 8, 2024 · Sitting Bull (born c. 1831, near Grand River, Dakota Territory [now in South Dakota], U.S.—died December 15, 1890, on the Grand River in South Dakota) was a Lakota (Teton) chief under whom the Oceti Sakowin ( Sioux) peoples united in their struggle against the encroachment of settlers on the northern Great Plains.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Sitting Bull’s Early Life
    • Sitting Bull Resists U.S. Government
    • Sitting Bull and The Fort Laramie Treaty
    • The Battle of Little Bighorn
    • Sitting Bull Surrenders
    • Sitting Bull and Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show
    • Sitting Bull’s Death and Burial Site
    • Sources

    Sitting Bull was born in 1831 near Grand River, Dakota Territory in what is today South Dakota. He was the son of Returns-Again, a renowned Sioux warrior who named his son “Jumping Badger” at birth. The young boy killed his first buffalo at age 10 and by 14, joined his father and uncle on a raid of a Crow camp. After the raid, his father renamed hi...

    Sitting Bull first battled the U.S. Army in June of 1863, when they came after the Santee Sioux (not the Dakota) in retaliation for the Minnesota Uprising, sparked when federal agents withheld food from the Sioux living on reservations along the Minnesota River. Over 300 Sioux were arrested in the Minnesota Uprising, but President Abraham Lincolnco...

    His resolve was not shared by all. In 1868, Red Cloud, or Mahpiua Luta (1822-1909), chief of the Oglala Teton Dakota Sioux, signed the Fort Laramie Treaty with 24 other tribal leaders and representatives of the U.S. government including Lieutenant General William Tecumseh Sherman. The treaty created the Great Sioux Reservation and earmarked additio...

    It was in a camp at Little Bighorn River that Sitting Bull, then a revered leader and holy man, or “Wichasa Wakan,” participated in a Sun Dance ceremony where he famously danced for 36 hours straight, making 50 sacrificial cuts on each arm before falling into a trance. When he awoke, he revealed that he had a vision of U.S. soldiers falling like gr...

    In the wake of the Battle of Little Bighorn, the incensed U.S. government redoubled their efforts to hunt down the Sioux. At the same time, the encroachment of white settlers on traditionally Indian lands greatly reduced the buffalo population that the Sioux depended on for survival. In May 1877, Sitting Bull led his people to safety in Canada. Wit...

    Sitting Bull was occasionally permitted to travel, and it was on one of his trips outside the reservation that he struck up a friendship with sharpshooter Annie Oakley, whom he affectionately nicknamed “Little Sure Shot” after seeing her perform in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1884. In 1885, Sitting Bull joined Oakley in performing in Buffalo Bill Cody’s...

    Standing Rock Reservation soon became the center of controversy when the Ghost Dance Movement started gaining traction. Followers believed that deceased tribe members would rise from the dead along with killed buffalo while all white people would disappear. Worried that the influential Sitting Bull would join the movement and incite rebellion, Indi...

    Sitting Bull. Biography.com. New Perspectives on The West: Sitting Bull. PBS. Sitting Bull. NPS.gov. Sitting Bull, Buffalo Bill And The Circus of Lies. The Independent. The Native American Ghost Dance, A Symbol of Defiance. ThoughtCo. Last Stand to Save Grave of Sitting Bull. The Telegraph.

    • Missy Sullivan
    • 4 min
  3. Oct 24, 2017 · A woman fainted and was carried into Sitting Bull’s tent. Deciding that it was a bad time to intervene, McLaughlin and Primeau spent the night at the nearby home of Bull Head, a lieutenant in ...

    • William Sitting Bull1
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    • 4 min
    • He was originally named 'Jumping Badger.' Sitting Bull was born around 1831 into the Hunkpapa people, a Lakota Sioux tribe that roamed the Great Plains in what is now the Dakotas.
    • Sitting Bull was credited with several legendary acts of bravery. Sitting Bull born circa 1831. Sitting Bull was renowned for his skill in close-quarters fighting and collected several red feathers representing wounds sustained in battle.
    • He was the first man to become chief of the entire Lakota Sioux nation. In the 1860s, Sitting Bull emerged as one of the fiercest opponents of white encroachment on Sioux land.
    • Sitting Bull had a spiritual premonition of his most famous victory. Though mainly remembered as a warrior and political leader, Sitting Bull was also a Lakota “Wichasa Wakan,” a type of holy man believed to have the gift of spiritual insight and prophecy.
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  5. Mar 1, 2022 · Sitting Bull and his fellow Lakota chiefs then sent a message to the federal officials who served as liaisons between the U.S. government and Native nations. ... Photo by William Henry Jackson ...

  6. Sitting Bull was the political and spiritual leader of the Sioux warriors who destroyed General George Armstrong Custer's force in the famous battle of Little Big Horn. Years later he joined ...

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